The evening world. Newspaper, January 16, 1904, Page 7

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CHICAGO DEAD AS A DOORNA Streets Deserted, Cafes Aban doned, and in Buffets There’s “Nothing Doing” at~ Night, Owing to Closing of Theatres. CHORUS GIRLS BECOMING NURSEMAIDS AND COOKS. Pawnshops Thrive, Thespians Mourn and the Banshee-Like Wail of the Money Changers Is Mournfully Heard. CHICAGO, Ml, Jan. 16—The banshee- ‘Uke wail of the money changers is the enly sound heard these nights in Chi- cago. The streets are deserted, cafes jabandoned &d the Bartenders’ Union 1s confronted with bankruptoy. In the vernacular of the street, there 19 “nothing doing." All this because tres, fifty-seven halls and seventeen churches have been closed by the Bullding Department, One theatre opened last night, the Auditorium, in ‘which the Thomas concerts are the at- traction, The act of closure has thrown 5,000 Parsons out of employment, Of these ¥,000 are connected with the sfage. It is asserted that 600 chorus girls are there out of employment, In the vaudi wvitle, musical comedy and legitimate jes the number aggregates 1,00. Stage ands, ushers and mechanics number (40. Waiters, bill posters, cabmen and bartenders laid off number 2,000. An indtcation of the far-reaching ef- fect of the closure is shown in the tion of the elevated roads and the Il- Unols Central in taking off half their rains after 8 P. M. The restaurants the Auditorium Annex and Victoria liman Building are closed after & ®. M. Rector's and a few others are Open, but without patrons. Chorus Girls as Narsemalds. Chorus girls have tuken up work as nursemaids and domestics and many are behind counters in department stores. Pawnshops are thriving. The stage people are the heaviest suffercrs, “The Bilver Slipper,” with a company of eighty; James O'Neill, Wilton Lackaye, in "The Pit"; Nat Goodwin, four stock companies, three burlesque companies, ten compantes playing cheap melo- drama and ten yaudeville companies are waiting and watching. No one knows when the playhous will open: Public opinion is unanimous if demand- fag that the letter of the law shall be complied with. Many theatres will never open, in others improvements requiring months will have to be made. Though the hew yet been passed, the Jaws have not temper of the City Council shows the ordinances will be most stringent. The remarkable change which hap come over she night life of the town has been widely com- mented upon man has quit Philadelphia and St. present night scenes of stirring activity in com- parison with the present situation. Th» pressure upon the Council to pass an order opening the theatres under Police and Fire department. control is enor- mous. When they are allowed to open the upper balconies will remain closed. One-third of the State street trade, according to one estimate, has been cut oft by the closing of places of amuse- ment, and local traction companies note a marked falling off in amount of traffic, due to the same cause. Street Railways Suffer. A man interested in the Union Trac- tion Company said yesterday that the receipts had fallen off $1,000 a night since the closing order went into ‘effect. mbers of the Union Loop Company estimated that the elevated roads had suffered an average daily loss in pa: sengers of between 3,000 and 4,000, while the late suburban trains on the Illinois Central haye been leaving the city with rt than half the passengers they usually carry when the theatres are open. i “The closing of the theatres has cut off at least one-third of the State street trade,” sald Isaac Woolf, of the Woolf Clothing Company. “The country trade is affected more than the city business, When people used to come to the elty to attend, th ld also do some shop- y stay at home, 0 her snerchants testifies to the same ‘The trade of the Wellin; said to have fallen off on hale by reason, of the closing, according tolproprietor A: 8. Gage, and the loss to the, Auditorium Hotel Company Is esti- mated by the management at several hundred do VAUDEVILLE FOR CHARITY. Entertainment Planned by Em- ployees of Bloomingdale Bros. The twenty-third annual vaudevule and ball of Bloomingdale Brothers Em- ployees Mutual Ald Society will take Place at Grand Central Palace on Satur- day evening, Jan. 23. An exceptionally strong vaudeville bill has been ar- ranged and one of the city's leading or- ghestins, will praviae mpsle for, the Louis dan ane rrioceeds will go to help swell the find of the Mutual Atd Society, which na nines ite Incention disbursed over $75,000 to the evel and dist: 0 da Ua Society concrols what is known as “fh ie Fanny Myers Fund,’ founded by the late Mra, Fanny Myers, n sister of the members of the firm, and intended to afford relief to those Indirectly connected with, Blooming or e e but not members of Mutual Aid Society peor rr. ‘The Society's ers are: Jose Myers, President; Alfred W, “Behesin: er, Vice-President; Fred Masabach, reasurer, and Miss Jonnfe Bellman, Secretury, LECTURES ON “ITALIAN IM! GRATION.” Mr. Eliot Norton and Mr. Gino HANNA DENIES yey THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 16, 1904, CANDIDACY IN 2,000 PERSONAL LETTERS oo oo Declares that the Opposition to the Nomina- tion of President Roosevelt Has Been Greatly Magnified. PITTSBURG, Jan. 16,—Senator Hanna been overestimated and to-day said: “T have sent out 2,000 personal letters denying that I am a candidate for the Presidency, and I do not want to be considered as such. I consider all such talk a closed incident. “The alleged opposition to the nomi- nation of President Roosevelt has magnified greatly by Demogratic papers and others with Democratic proclivities."’ Senator Hanna said he would issue the call for the Republican National Convention in a few days. It has been delayed on account of the talk about Chicago hotel-keepers advancing their rates. SIX NEW PLAYS FOR NEXT WEEK} A Great Theatrical Buzzing Promised at Local Theatres by —Also Two First Perform-| ances This Season at Opera.| thirty-three thea-|~ the band next week. An even balr- dozen of fresh attractians are an- nounced for as many leading theatres. An important eyent will be the return Tits theatrical bee will buzz to beat to the New York stage, after en absence | of three years, of Ada Rohan, on Mon- day evening. This muy¢n-admired act- ross, in conjunetion for the first time in this clty with Otis Skivner, will begin a threo weeks’ engagement at the Lyric ‘Theatre by appearing in of the Shyew." Fer the the play, will be Sheridan's Belahctut sic, clas: os Sch, OF Bcancay aud Merchant of Vet 5 Seviinier & Co, haye, it is sald, provi age laborate pro- ductions and exercised much care in selecting a s&pporting company, which embraces affiong its members’ Edwin arrey. os 2 One interesting feature of “Olympe,”" which Amelia Bingham will present for the first time in New York at the Knickerbdoker Theatre on Monday night, will be the deferred debut of Lillfan Russel¥#s daughter, Dorathy Russell. She will have the role of Mile, rot jn the romantic drama by Pierre ourcelle, which is laid in the pletur- esque period of Louis XY. Other new House. Intmitable Katle Barry ts still playing the slavey. Alice Fischer, in “What's the Matter with Susan WIT be at the West End Star oy a) will hi Joe Welch he Ped Anctier Canedio 3; Carter thriller, Phi * Is announced for nist which closes a seven weeks’ Tun at the American to- Aight, mu move to the Metropolis. fain of Guilt” Atl Be, noticeable at "Brocior's Fifty-eighth Thea- Fhe Tiger Lilles Burlesque C wilt he th ene ton att Fr ie “lie Pheatres, Glad “Stereiy 4 nt vdmeat| Kitty fae The ™ Students of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts will present. “The Wife." by Belasco and De Mille. at the Empire Theatre on Thursday afternoon. Homer Davenport, the cartoonist make his debut before a New ‘York audience on ‘Thursday afternoon next at the Manhattan Theatre, where he Pi gpeak on “The Power of a Car- toon.” YAUORY IEEE ATTRACTIONS. The Four Ott “The Smart Set’ mit head a Bilt at at Proctor's Twenty: hird Street Theatre, which will ‘also Include James B. Donovan, Trish Cope. dian McWatters id Tyson, in “Glimpses Behind the Beagas,” and Can; field and Carlton ‘The Hoodoo. * Proctor’s Fifth caverta stock Bhagtre ‘Present Under- Fhe farce, “Champagne and Oxstors,”, will be the offering at the company will mere’s Fan. Members of Minx Bingham's company ave Henry Woodruff, H. dha “Eleee pvenperte: Amongt tre fumiliar names fs that of Bijou Fernan- American army life will be portrayed on the stage of the Hudson Theatre, beginning Monday night, when Robert Edeson, with the prestige of his suce ‘Soldiers of Fortune," will a another Richard Harding Davis Ranson's Folly," ‘The jieuten- ants folly consists in his laying |p Wager to disguise himself as a road uxeit and to hold up a stage coach. a practical joke. ‘The conch is held up by the real desperado, who shoots the paymest'r, one of the passengers, and anson is In consequence charged with The cast will include San fry Harwood, Frazer Coil: Thorne, Eleanor Carey and Dorothy Tennant. oe Another musical comedy, Daisy," Casino on Monday evening. It was originally the work of Seymour Hicks and Walter Slaughter, but it has been rewritten by Edgar Smith, the architect of the Weber & Fields burlesques, and rejoices in new music by A, N. Norden 4ud other composers. It is a Weber * Welds enterprise, and the numbers among’ its brighter: tte hts “An English Christie MacDonald, igelow, Geor: Beane, ‘Truly 8! ttc and ‘lemplar Saxe. Ben Teal will look after the beauty of the show. . Back to Broadway on Monday even-| rin Ing will come Virginia Earl, who will slip into Daly's with “Sergeant itty,” 4 comic opera by R. H. Burnside and A. Baldwin Sloane. I<!tty steps into a uni- form to further an affair of her heart, and besides singing and dancing, has a chance to fence. The piece was most. ‘orably received when it opened ut the Montauk ‘Theatre, Brooklyn, early in the season. With Miss Earl are Junie McCree, Albert Parr, Carrie Per- kins, Grace Belmont and others. William H. Thompson will appear at the Madison Square Theatre on Tues- day evening in the latest Parisian comedy, “Eke Secret of Polichinelle.”’ The piece is named after a figuro of speech—tHe fool's _secret—something every one knows. It begins in the home of an elderly couple, who, in planning for thelr son's future, reach the con> clusion that he should be married. With great forethought they select a wife for him and then apprise him of their choice, only to learn that he ts marriea and is the father of a boy. Grace Kim- Dull ‘will have the loading female role, and another well-known player ill be, seen in a character part is see At the American Theatre on Monday night, Ralph Stuart will be seen in “By Right of Sword," a romantic comedy drama made from Arthur W. Mareh- mont's book of the same nam re. Dr. Doremus and Leonidas Westervelt. ‘The scenes are laid in: Russia, Miss Jessaline “Rogers, who was leadin: woman of the American Theatre stoc! company last season will play the Coun- tees Paula Tueski, om An@rew Mack, after 8 brief"aip into comic opera, will return. to the Four- teenth Street ‘Theatre in ‘'The Bold Soger Boy," on Monday evening Mr. Mack will sing a number of new songs. ary Frank Dantels, in “The OMce Roy,” will be the attraction at the Grand Opera-House. Loulse Gunnfhg has re- sumed her place in the companys. “A Chinese Honeymoon” will be the musical offering at the Harlem Opera- Ginhour | i will take up its abode at the| 7! One Hundred and ‘Twenty-Arth street jouse. ‘The chief attraction at Proctor's Newark Theatre will be Prelle's dogs. ;A promunens: fee feature of the bjll at the Fini's, Or- Madame Ca SheatraToe trent ladys attractions will 'b Jack Tuck 8 ‘Sisinny's Mme, Ade! Jeymann in her eae ful Uiuston: ‘and frank Bush, the funny story-teller will have, amoni and company, in 'Shipmate: Keatons ina comedy sketch, Mame Keith’ Chartes the Basque Qu: ‘On Tony Panter'e: bill witl_be Charles WOMAN FIGHTS FOR THE NIGHT SCHOOLS Mrs. ngarver Van Rensselaer Also Makes Vigorous Opposi- of the Recreation Centres, WOULD BE A SERIOUS BLOW.’ She Points Out the Great Good that Has Resulted from Them, and In- sists that If Cuts Are Necessary They Be Made In Other Branches. Mra, Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Pi ident of the, Public Education Ass ciation, spoke with feeling to-day vf the threatened closing of the evening educational centre: “No one,” she said, “who has not become acquainted with the work of the Board of Education can appre-| of education, though, that Yjevery child should get full time, but lew. |in school. ‘of protest against half-time as there yw |is in atriying to save the element of ree) Burk Grace La Rue and the Inkey joys. in ‘In Vaudeville: the Prevost Acrobats, in Fun in a ‘Turkish Bath; the Heavenly Twins, and J. M. Nor- cross, Meakin and La Mars, “The Big ‘Three Minstrels. Hurtig & Seamon's programme will offer Charles Dickson and company in “Heart-to-Heart Talks,” Billy B. Van nd Rose Beaumont in ‘Patsy's De- a boo,” the Four Bards, and the Adonis Ni rol will be seen in “The vax" at the Eden Musee. The Korean Twins will remain at Huber's. IN BROOKLYN. Maude Adams will appear at the Mon- tauk in “The Pretty Sister of Jose. GRAND OPERA BILLS. The novelty of the coming week at the Metropolitan Opera-House will be Donizetti's charming“LHllsir dAmore,"* cast including Mme, Sembrich Mme. Bouton as Giannetta, is0 as the rustic lover Nemo- Arturo Vigna will conduct. this lively ‘work 1s usually de- seribed,on, the bils ua “a Joyous melo drat it will be the bill on Satu day afternoon, Gn Wednesday evening Mozart's “Magic Flute” will be given in Italian with Mme. Sembrich as Astrifiammante, and a cast embracing Mmes. Gadsk Seygard, Homer, Bouton, Lemon, Van Dresser and Mapleson, and M Dip- Pa, Campanart and Pol Plancon. Fellx Mott! will be the conductor. On Monday. for the frst time this season, "'Slegfried™ will be given with @ cast’ which in several Important In- stances will be new to thi country Mme. Gadsk! will be Brunnhild Loulse Homer will be the E: Miss Marguerite Lemon will sing the woodbird. The Slexfried will be Mr, Kraus, Mr. Van Rooy Is cast for Der Wanderer and Mr. Reiss will repeat his admirable interpretation of Mime. A new Alberich will rin the person of Mr, Gorits and Victor Icloepter will be the Fafner. Conductor, Felix Borer “Tristan und Isolde,” with Mme. Ter- nina for the first time aa Isolde and Miss Edyth Walker as Brangaeno, is promised for Friday evening. Kraus Will be the Tristan, Me Van Rooy wilt sing Kurwenal and Mr. Kloepfer will again be the King Marke, Mr. Mott! will conduct. SHE SUES WEBER & FIELDS, Actress Rose Norris Says She Wa: Discharged Without Cause. Rose Norris has a grievance against Weber & Fields because, as she says in her complaint drawn by Vidaver & Josophson, they engaged her for twen- ty-two weeks and fired her after the first week without caure. She was to support the genteel Wilile Gollice In "A, Woo} and His Money” at and she began on Dee, 7. 6N eave Was dismissed on Dee, i9, By a’ simple example. inarithmetic | Gs—7 equals 12) she demonstrates that the formality of a two weeks’ notice was Gispensed with by. the ‘comedian-man- R She di nis ay for the whole e will be triad by Justice Levi rit in the Suprome Court next week, “CONSTIPATION is the starting point of disease. It can be easily removed by taking, on arising, half a glass of the Natural Laxative Water, t ery against half-time for schol- ars Is not prompted by ao crying a need as would be that made against the clas- ing of the evening instruction and re- creation centres, It is desirable that tion to the Proposed Closing’ persons, It requires a thorough medical education to appreeiate and understand the womanly organism. CONFIDE IN A MAN, part time classes are not so detrimen- tal as most people think. “For iit childven three hours and a halt is @ long enough time to be There is not half the need society who find’ pl these evening schools, How the Syai Started, “The first evening school was start- 4 by the Public Education Association, and {ts work was taken up by the Board of Education. It ts diMfcult to realize, perhaps, until one has seen ‘what these evening achoals and lec- tures mean to the people, just how §reat their influence ts, In the recrea- tion centres, where the children are brought into contact with one another and with the teachers, the very foun- dation of thelr moral nature may be laid. Manners are the foundation of morals, and the children, through asso- elation, soon learn what is right. They have the example of thetr teachers, and jn thelr play they learn how to yield to one another and become leay selfish. = 1 learn what sacrifice means, and are taught with no effort on their own part, “The evening lectures and the schools give opportunity to those who have to work during the day and who wish ta continue thelr educatioA past the gram- mar school mits. The night schools are one of the greatest factors we haye in Americanizing foreigners, When the Moseley Comission was in this country studying the educational system in the United States, one of the members expressed his surprise at the great influence our system has in Am- evieanizing foreigners. ‘They can't do it in London,’ he said. “Another thing that surprised him was the way discipline 1s preserved without visible effort, The children are taught to govern themselves. ‘The even- ing eat and recreation system essential to boys und girls’ who Work in the daytime. “Then think of men and .women—some of them take advantage of ire and help in eat step forward taken when the Introduction of manual train- ing added to the idea of education something more than Instruction from 001 there has to be a cut in any of the educational branches it is pref- erable that it be in the®cademic course. Since It appears that for lack of a SuMclent appropriation for. the coming year the Board of Education has been forced to reduce the salaries of the teachers in the evening schools, and ance, if no help is given, the expen- ditures for free lecture ‘courses will have to be retrenched and the evening recreation centres closed on Jan. 31, it is apparent that something should be done. “The work of the Board of Educa- Hon has made such wonderful strides the past ten years that {t seems two bad ‘that this unquestionable bene. fit, which reaches a needy class, should be’ affected. I am opposed to the iden ating any buildings in_ th ven for ediicational purpose tina bad precedent and would. % @ great pity. It is all the city can do now to protect its parks, “The school system has made such rapll advancement in the past few years that it {s unfortunate that any hase of ite work should be nttacked here han been a gradual raising of the standards, and all teachers real- ize that the schools must be primarily for the benefit of the children, not for the teachers. sincerely trust something . will be done to prevent the curtailing of this work of (ak evening schools and re- creation cen' It ts a shame to strike srethen very foundation of Gonal influence which reaches. the chil: dren and adults, whose development means #0 much to our political and social welfar Are-You Lazy ? If you would have the happi- ness of health, with the elastic step and clear bright skin, set your digestive organs and liver right by using Beecham's Pills 1 Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c, and 2c. Lawyers. GEO. ROBINSON | (Lawyer), la: 09 Nassau #. (Day.) 1370 at. (Night Purchase and Exchange. TRADING STAMPS” purchased “at incomplete books at pro- Address W 271 World, 88 per, book pertionate prices, The salary of the Mayor of New York is $15,000 per year. The World Almanac and Encyclopedia tolls the mounts of the salaries of all public officials, Price 25 cents, by mall 35, When a woman has ills and pains she cannot bear—when life seems dark for every woman, she should confide her troubles to a physician of standing in the community, or one who has a national reputation. Cer- tainly it would not be the part of wisdom to confide in an ignorant per- son, without medical education, simply because she was a woman, There is every reason why she should write to a specialist, particularly to beauty, but, at the same|one who has made the diseases of time, there are girls in| Women a specialty for a third of a our cities who p se | century, like Dr. R. V. Pleree, founder neither beauty of face}of the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical nor form, because in| Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. All hig these instances they suffer from| correspondence ig held sacredly con- nervousness, the restilt of disorders] fidential, and he gives’ his advice of the womanly organism. At regu-| free and without charge, lar Intervals they suffer so much SING}.E AND MARRIGD WOMEN that thelr strength leaves them; they| very often find that it js repugnant are so prostrated that it takes days|to thelr feelings to consult their for them to recover their strength.| family physician, In such a case they Of course, such periodic distress has|can put perfect confidence in Qr. its bad effect on the nervous system. | Pierce, who has made such a success The withered aid drawn faces, the|in the treatment of woman's diseases, dark circles and crow’s-feet over the| for he will give you the very heat eyes, the straight figure without|advice possible, and without cost, to those curves which lend so much to|you. To grow beautiful, healthy and feminine beauty, are the unmistak-| happy shoulr be the desire of every able signs of womanly disorders, The} woman. It 1s thén possible to hold a young girl should study how to make herself more attractive; how to oyer- come those bodily ills that pull her down, Mrs. Langtry has well said: “The keystone to physical beauty is perfect health. A sick woman cannot he a beautiful woman, nor can she be anything. but what we English ‘call a poor-spirited woman. Toa great| been giving your medicine a thor- extent a woman's beauty is measured |ough trial, Am on the third bottle by her. vitality-—-by her health. Ajandt when I began to take it could famous epecialist in woman's dis-| not walk across the floor nor get up cases, Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo,| or down from a chair without belp N. Y., fas always advocated for young women's happiness absolute|‘be well again; that the uterus had freedom from care and anxiety; at| become hard, and unless I had au least eight hours’ sleep out of every} operation would never be any better. twenty-four, in addition a short nap|1 went right to taking your ‘Favorite Girls With Beautiful Faces, or Graceful Figures. im) MERICA girls have a world-wide reputation for bring contentment to it Mrs. H. M. Rude, 9 Seigrist street, | T) Newark, N. Y., writes: “IT am much pleased with what bg lt treatment has done for me, 1 hushand and make home happy and| {har't AUDPORE . YOU) | thought T was a ‘fake’ because I did not write to you before, but T have] \ by The doctors here said | would never “DOUGLAS USES THE SKINS OF 231 COLTS, CALFS, KIDS, STEERS, ANGARGOS, ETC. EVERY DAY. Tl. il i oreyi a $F ze i Hi Fe age by Be iPS dfs UGLAS STORES IN GREATER NEw YORK; (er Howard. | 845 Bighth Avenue, r Sth Si 520 Willis ee a Broa 494 Fifth Ave J ERSEY CITY, ts 18 Newark ay. NEWARK, 785 Broad St. ue, Ave., cor. 120th. 356 Sixth Avenue. jandt aerate even below a to SeoH thet other q pe eae 4 femalr Dining «Aas MA DAY OF WAPRn Tint | 4 gi And Noulsetite. Chee that om en tent Banat ee iat ff iar st iT : ‘ GIVEN, A® RE i feet wat Pati, Mater a is capt ‘atagtion joe Aten te Pere fia pa Btevtu ae ath hima: | dia in rie Foul er personal ena ef Manhattan. it the mh Hoe othe, era axes end ewrmentn. B ashville pols i ainnns ht i fmol Veer alee cane Tote and Cleve LOUIS EXPE eo ‘hast: ent. Mn sgt flande red poraren eventh' wtreet ad Hives Borsueh of Brooklyn. at the o°tiee of the mt: funk Bull ir{t Ls v9 clea ‘inp oro ‘Quen 4 vert meee Bi Son. ran hn fth street. Lane” ole a of Tehmond. at th at the MS periment. Masonts Buinding, staples ns Shale cincinnatl rate unis 2 Sig in the middie of the day, if possible | Prescription,’ and before I had taken rations tn all the Boroughs must Simple indoor exercises or brisk; two bottles was able to do my own ol oe afanatt In the main office in walks in the outdoor air. For somc| work, except my washing, and now I relat this is impossible, and many are con-| do that and take in boarders, too, I . mers fined to a continual indoor life be-| cannot say enough in yq@ur praise, | te Baro Sears Pg ie cause of disease of the womanly|and would advise every woman who Thelnews, in ae suffers with female trouble to give it a trial, as I have done, for it cer- tainly is a blessing to the sex.” NOW TC KEP YOUTH AND BEAUTY, One great secret of youth and beauty for the young woman or the mother is the proper understanding of her womanly system and well- being. Every woman, young or old, should know herself and her physical make-up. A good way to arrive at this knowledge is to get a good doctor book, such for instance as “The People’s Common Sense Medical Ad- viser,” by R. V. Plerce, M. D., which can readily be procured by sending twenty-one cents in one- cent stamps for paper-bound volume, or thirty-one stamps for cloth-bound organs. To these is offered $500 re. ward if they cannotebe cured of Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Pro- lapses, or Falling of Womb. All Doctor Pierce asks is a fair and reasonable trial of his means of cure. No other medicine for the cure of woman’s peculiar ailments is backed by such a remarkable guarantee as Doctor Plerce’s Favorite Prescription. No other medicine for women’s ills is possessed of the unparalleled curative properties that would warrant its makers jn publishing such an offer; no other remedy has such a record of a third of a century ‘of cures on which to base such a remarkable offer. ‘There 1s every reason why women New ore, at the oft A tame tse SPECIAL. —I Pe Weatea between the hours pe 10 ke at | MN eo be on Baturday, wae alt "Here niggtiona inust be made between 10": oho. ian NK A. O'DONNELL, IAMS PREG RAMUET. ident, STRASHOURGER, fr na mien read our 400-page “auton TO INVESTORS and BAILY MARIE LETTER." Ingued Gratis, jed Free. Haight & Freese Co.,|2 » ark Florida cate Fi NORFOLK AND WESTERN 9 rut Alemphis and New Orleans, M3 BSE, er Preae < OHIO, = anda roi 6 FOL) LB nironiy should not trust their delicate con- stitutions in the hands of unskilled copy, by addressing Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. ~~ Banking and Financial. ~~ $10,000,000 NEW YORK CITY 3% Tax Exempt Gold Bonds (Payable in Fifty Years) TO BE SOLD WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1904 OFFERED DIRECT TO INVESTORS A legal investment for trust funds, exempt from taxation except for State purposes. No “ail or none” bids received, thus giving Investors the same ad- vantages as dealers, Bonds are awarded to bidders offering the highest promium. od envelope, inelosed in the addrested envelope, TWO) PER, CENT. OF PAR VALUB ACCOMPA. iD. It must be ah or certified eheck on late or, Natinal Meet New York Clty. This depocit will, if requssted pe ‘eurned . 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